RADIO
By Martha Blanchfield
Magritte, Escher, 2-D and 3-D riffs on perspective—“I get
the
impossible and
Harold Davis
improbable
a charge out of creating things influenced in this vein,” shares photographer Harold Davis, who is a pioneer in a new art form—part photographer, part digital illusionist. He sees software and computer monitors as the new paintbrush and canvas. Pushing the creative line with digital imaging technologies has been in his blood since 2005. Before bits and bytes took hold, Davis worked as a studio photographer in New York, and then waged a career as a software developer and technology executive. He does not miss film, but appreciates how working in film focused him to learn, perfect and appreciate the classical principles of good imagemaking. A renowned artist whose work has been widely published and collected, Davis is recognized for his night photography with its experimental ultra-long exposure techniques, vibrant and saturated colors, and composition. He’s also a master of what he calls the impossible image: photo composites that appear realistic, but upon closer inspection are surreal or manifestly impossible in
ALL PHOTOs COPYRIGHT © Harold Davis
the real world. A third theme is his creative florals and biological images, which are often combined with digital painting to create pleasing, unusual effects.